only 22% say stick to your principles. now, you spoke out against the president's first off, saying it looked like he was offering a cut to social security, but if his next offer looks the same and that's the only way to come together, would you support it? >> honestly, the support and many of us, including myself, are disappointed that cutting social security benefits was part of the grand bargain. it became kind of like a symbolic issue, the republican in the house needed to have a symbol. it was social security. my point is everything on the table also includes derivatives. it includes a transaction fee. it includes a variety of things that are not on the table. tax code issues, subsidies, and looking at how we look at entitlement programs in a way that creates solvency and protection, not in the hysteria of the moment, where something, everybody has to provide a symbol. a grand fiscal bargain is not about symbolism it's about fiscal policy. if we get to that point, yes, we're prepared to compromise. >> let me stop you